This Startup Savior Has a Message for Entrepreneurs: Ignore Silicon Valley

Nick Huber is leading a growing entrepreneurial movement that’s anti-unicorn—and pro-plumbing

Stephanie Clifford
Marker

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A close-up portrait of Nick Huber with 2D illustrations of paintbrushes, buckets, arrows, and hammers surrounding his face.
Photo illustration by Rob Dobi for Marker

It’s early evening in Athens, Georgia, and Nick Huber, entrepreneur and recently crowned startup expert, is about to record a podcast. Huber and his followers aren’t your typical founders. They don’t want to divine the next unicorn, launch a SPAC, raise a wad of eight-figure VC funding, or even break into a Y Combinator class. They have their eyes set on something more earthly, if not provocative: hatch a really solid pest control or lawn care business. “You ask anybody what entrepreneurship is, and they think of Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Shark Tank,” Huber says. “The real, true entrepreneurs in our society are just opportunists who start something to make a little bit of money. They start scrubbing driveways or painting houses.”

In a red T-shirt, fresh off of chopping onions for his family’s dinner, the 31-year-old Huber is rattling into an iPhone in almost stream-of-consciousness thoughts as he records a podcast about today’s subject, commercial real estate. He begins in a beige basement, wanders outside, spins around with the phone in hand (a college decathlete, he has the rangy restlessness of a serious runner), roams back…

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